Thursday, June 25, 2009

WAIT!

Posted by Adrian Ryan on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 10:14 PM

I just saw Michael Jackson—ALIVE!— at the Wallingford QFC! Like, ten minutes ago! Totally holding hands with Vili Fualaau! Swear to God!

Somebody...get me The Enquirer! Quick!

Right Now in the Death of Michael Jackson

Posted by David Schmader on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 9:50 PM

Larry King is discussing the loss with....JC Chasez. It's Night One, and it's already come to this?

Hold up: Corey Feldman has shown up, Larry King tries to get him to talk about his adolescent drama with MJ, Feldman demurs: "The world lost a great artist today, let's not focus on the negatives."

And now we've got Smokey Robinson, so shut my mouth...

My Dreams for Michael Jackson

Posted by David Schmader on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 8:23 PM

"Of course, it's like he's been dead for years," said a friend discussing Michael Jackson. I got her point, but, um, NOW HE'S DEAD, and any latent dreams of Jackson executing some miraculous third-act comeback (in my dreams, this always involved Rick Rubin, ala Johnny Cash) die with him.

The period has been placed at the end of the sentence. His art will not redeem him. He's a one-of-a-kind musical genius who went crazy, played with morphing his race and gender, slept with children, was repeatedly acquitted of child-molestation charges, and then died, alone and broke.

It's enough to make you cry.

Here's one of the many great songs off Michael's underrated Dangerous.

Michael Jackson Tribute at NWFF

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 7:33 PM

On Tuesday, July 7th, the NWFF will have a Michael Jackson tribute. Tickets go on sale tomorrow at nwfilmforum.org.

Tuesday July 7 (8pm, doors at 7:30)
Michael Jackson Tribute
Northwest Film Forum hosts a special celebration of and fitting tribute to the great entertainer and popular music icon Michael Jackson who passed away on June 25th at the age of 50. His greatest music videos from the late-70s and 80s will be shown in the cinema (and cranked up loud). We’ll also show excerpts of a 1968 performance of the Jackson 5, his performance in the 1978 musical ‘The Wiz,’ the unavailable 1983 documentary “The Making Of Michael Jackson’s Thriller” and the 1983 TV performance that introduced the “moonwalk.” Refreshments will be available in the cinema, and all ages are welcome. Join us raising a glass to the one and only King of Pop, seeing Michael’s moves in action, and shaking a behind to the music that moved the world.

Sky Saxon also gone...

Posted by Mike Nipper on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 7:00 PM

For me, the loss of Sky "Sunlight" Saxon is the greatest loss of today. Farrah...um, I liked the other Angels. Wacko Jacko...I think once he went solo I was too old, or too rural to get his Pop. I was listening to '50s R&B as he ascended to his royal status...ANYWAYS...

Sky Saxon, AKA Richard Marsh, began in the late '50s as Little Ritchie Marsh w/a handful of teener/R&B sides that effectively went nowhere, but his forming of The Seeds in 1965, with Jan Savage (guitar), Daryl Hooper (bitchin' hair, keyboards) and Rick Andridge (drums) changed his fortunes, so to speak...and ours also as the Seeds' attitude and style of playing were one cornerstone of '70s punk. They were an American archetype '60s garage/punk band, full on...white middle class kids gone bad, growing their hair out, (maybe) taking drugs, chasing girls...and really digging that Super Fuzz pedal, kinda band. PERFECT for blowing summer of 1966 UP. And there was no other band that sounded quite like the Seeds. If you've ever heard 'em they obviously cannibalized their own riffs, but it doesn't serve as off-putting redundancy. Instead, like Bo Diddley's beat, it only reinforced their intent and presence.

As the '60s wore on they dipped into the sike side of 1967 (Saxon has been said to be first to use the term "Flower Power") and succeeded in producing a GENIUS sike LP, Future, that still sounded like the Seeds chugga-chug while getting quite dreamy and delicate. Their next LP, not officially a Seeds LP, is the only spoiler in their cannon is a "blues" LP...said to be a contract breaker...um, but the less said regarding THAT the better. Finally, in '68, a live LP was issued "Raw and Alive: Merlin's Music Box"...it's one of the few really good live LPs, ever. By '71 the teen scene had changed and new tracks dried up, so what was left of the band split. Sky moved to Hawaii, and eventually became, Sunlight, a member of the Source Family.

He recorded and performed randomly in the '80s and '90s, but swung back into reality in 2002 with a reformed Seeds...which until this morning were still going strong. In fact, they played in Texas just this past Saturday night...at the moment I've not heard what caused his death.

I think Sky was a bit over 70 years old...

Pushin Too Hard


Tripmaker

We Have Covered Michael Jackson For Years

Posted by Paul Constant on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 6:01 PM

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Michael Jackson has been a continuing Stranger obsession. If you need more Michael Jackson miscellany and are getting tired of reading the vulture-like media reports, here is your one-stop shop for things we have written about our newly departed King of Pop:

David Schmader published a poem about MJ that he received via e-mail back in 2005. He also published a child's story about Michael Jackson titled "Booger Boy and Snot Boy Versus Michael Jackson." He linked to a sad retrospective interview of Michael Jackson on the eve of his 50th birthday. And of course, who could forget Mr. Schmader's wonderful, weird news story about people hanging out at the MJ trial?

My plan was simple: I would go to California for the beginning of the trial and mix with the true believers in their natural habitat—support rallies, courthouse vigils—in hopes of acquiring, or at least better understanding, their unshakable faith in Jackson. However, to true believers, there is no enemy more insidious than the Media. To "pass" as a true believer, I needed a strategy: Walk softly and wear an expressive T-shirt. Local custom-made T-shirt shop B-Bam! put together a collection of pro-Michael T-shirts for me. "Innocence Is Beautiful" read one, the letters framing an airbrushed image of Michael surrounded by the Children of the World. "Tom Sneddon Is a Cold Man" read another shirt, its anti-prosecution slogan rendered in an icy wintery blast. Finally, my most confrontational shirt, which dissed Jackson's accuser with the creepy nickname allegedly given to the boy by Jackson himself: "BLOWHOLE IS A LIAR."

At the end of that year's issue, we published a regret by Michael Jackson:

First and foremost, I regret being made the target of a prosecutorial witch hunt and the subject of vile slander by evil people who only want to bring a successful black man down and who wouldn't understand the true meaning of love if it bit them in their big, mean butts.

He's been featured on a list of Ten Things That've Made Us Say "Wow" SInce the Dawn of Time, not very far after The Big Bang.

And most recently, Lindy West studied Michael Jackson's stuff from very close-up:

The other week, I was blessed (by Jesus, I’m pretty sure!) with the opportunity to visit a most wondrous land, entitled “A Whole Bunch of Michael Jackson’s Stuff Sitting in a Big Room.” You see, Michael Jackson accidentally got suuuper destitute, because he spent all of his money on child-sized flying carpets and gold-plated best friends and Teaching Your Pet Chimp Sign Language for Dummies, so he decided to auction off his crazy-shit collection to raise some bucks. All of which meant that people—like ME—could go look at it at an auction house in Los Angeles! At the shit! For a minute!

Clearly, we have adored the man for a very long time and we will miss him.

Remembering Michael Jackson

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 5:05 PM

Here's a list of places in town who will be remembering Michael Jackson tonight. If you have any to add, e-mail me at megan@thestranger.com or leave a comment and I'll add it to the list.

*EMP|SFM is hosting a Michael Jackson tribute happy hour tonight at See Sound Lounge. We will be spinning MJ’s tunes, showing videos and remembering an icon. 6-10pm, drinks specials a-plenty. See Sound is at 115 Blanchard.

*Thifty at Capitol Club (414 E Pine) is throwing a dance party tonight with DJs playing classic and remixed MJ tracks! 10 pm, drink specials all night, no cover.

*J-Justice promises to play plenty of Michael Jackson tonight at Grey Gallery for Blueprint. 9 pm, no cover.

*DJ Shotgun Lab will be spinning Michael Jackson vinyl tonight at Lottie's Lounge in Columbia City.

*There will be two hours of Jackson's music tonight at Havana (10th and Pike) from 7-9 pm, no cover.

*DJ Soulpatch has a four hour tribute to Michael Jackson tonight at the Triple Door Musiquarium (216 Union St) from 9 pm-1 am. No cover charge and happy hour specials available from 10 pm-midnight.

*All day Friday and Saturday, from 11 am-9 pm, the International Fountain at Seattle Center will be paying tribute to Michael Jackson while playing musical highlights from his life.

Also, word on the street (ahem, Twitter) says that some folks plan on partaking in some Michael Jackson karaoke tonight at Hula Hula, and Captain Black's DJ will also have a special MJ setlist.

Goodbye, MJ

Posted by Lindy West on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 5:04 PM

...FOR NOW*.

goodbye_for_now.jpg

Sign formerly of Neverland Ranch.

*Does that mean he'll be coming back?

Dear Kexp and KUOW

Posted by Christopher Frizzelle on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 4:43 PM

You realize Michael Jackson just died, right? Are you out to lunch? A late lunch?

UPDATE: KEXP now has someone reading emails to the station about Michael Jackson. At least that's something. How about you play some songs, KEXP?

UPDATE 2: Ah! Ben Gibbard's cover of "Thriller." Nicely played.

AHEM!: I stand corrected. Someone at KEXP points me to this afternoon's playlist. Kevin Cole been scattering in MJ songs (and a wild variety of covers) all afternoon.

Finding a Silver Lining…

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 4:27 PM

Michael Jackson’s death has put to rest the controversial man he had become. For right now, all skeletons have been released from the closet and all alleged sins have been forgiven.*

The world can now unabashedly celebrate a man who made some of the best goddamn pop music history has ever known, and tonight we should all motherfucking dance. If you know of any Michael Jackson tribute sets/dance parties happening around the city tonight, let us know about them in the comments.

RIP, Michael Jackson.


*Statement only valid for the next 12 hours—the internet moves quickly and it is an unforgiving place.

Michael Jackson 1958-2009

Posted by David Schmader on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 2:51 PM

404f/1245966644-michael-jackson-thriller.jpg

TMZ reports that Michael Jackson has died.

UPDATE: LA Times confirmation.

So fucking sad, for so many reasons.

He will not be forgotten, to say the very least.

Michael Jackson Rushed to UCLA Hospital with Cardiac Arrest

Posted by David Schmader on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 2:39 PM

5a38/1245964654-scaled.michael-jackson-1.jpg

TMZ's got as much of the story as there is. The crux:

We've just learned Michael Jackson was taken by ambulance to a hospital in Los Angeles ... and we're told it was cardiac arrest and that paramedics administered CPR in the ambulance.

UPDATE: A Jackson family member tells TMZ Michael is in "really bad shape" and the brothers are headed to UCLA.

Earlier this month came tabloid reports of Jackson's self-starving, a practice that not-infrequently involves potentially lethal heart trouble. Stay tuned, and for now, let's remember the man in happier times.

Glastonbury Envy '09

Posted by Dean Fawkes on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 2:34 PM

Glastonbury '09

This year's Glastonbury Festival just started and we're forced to once again wish we were globe-trotting super-spy playboy pop billionaires to be able to join everyone.

The largest music festival in the world, going on for nearly forty years, Glastonbury is both family-run and traditionally non-corporate — charities are the usual sole sponsors — but preposterously eclectic as well, with 200,000 people, dozens of distinct areas, more stages than you can list, and an every-genre line-up as long as the equator. All of it runs 24 hours a day for four days.

This year's bands are more interesting than usual. Romanticizing aside.

Hook our veins up to at least (yes!) Lilly Allen, Skream, Madness, Altern-8, Erol Alkan, The Japanese Popstars, Caspa, MPHO, The Streets, Ray Davies, East 17, Tinchy Stryder, Chase & Status, Josh Wink, Dimbleby & Capper, Ladyhawke, Prodigy, Jarvis Cocker, Roots Manuva, Tindersticks, Timo Maas, Benga, Q-Tip, The Wonder Stuff, Robyn Hitchcock, Jamie T, Stanton Warriors, Wonky Pop, Dizzee Rascal, The Specials, Kasabian, Little Boots, and, of course, Blur.

Look at the many hundreds of names.

Bad news?

Unlike other years, the round-the-clock, commercial-free coverage snubs anyone from outside the U.K. Clever and questionably legal proxies can sort you out. But you'll likely have easier luck listening to the live radio-stream and stirring up the patience to poke around for video clips.

Damn.

We wish were there.

Let's pretend.


Byrning Down the House

Posted by Eric Grandy on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 2:31 PM

(Yes, that's the title I'm going with.) Last night's David Byrne concert at the Paramount was (almost) totally perfect. Byrne took the stage with his band and dancers all in angelic white, Byrne looking like he could be a silvery-haired 57 forever, immortal.

"Thank you," he said to thundering applause. (His speaking voice sounded more sandy than I'd expected.) "It's good to be back. Last time we were here, we were at the Benaroya symphony hall, and it was a little more formal.

"I see two professional photographers in the audience," he continued. "You're all welcome to take pictures, but we ask that you only post attractive pictures. Any unattractive pictures should be deleted."

He went on to say that they'd be playing some songs he'd done with Brain Eno (huge cheers) and songs he'd done without Eno and/or with other folks. "That's the menu," he said. "But I don't need to show you the menu. I'm the chef and the waiter, I'll just bring you things to consume. And you'll get a bill at the end of the night."

The band began with "Strange Overtones," one of the strongest songs off of the recent Eno collaboration Everything that Happens Will Happen Today, and the sounds was impeccable (the band was of course air-tight: two drummers, one keyboardist, one super agile bassist, three back-up singers); almost immediately, there was dancing in the front row on the floor. Three dancers came out for "I Zimbra" and played a little game of microphone tag with the three backup singers, taking their mic stands and rearranging them around the stage with the singers in tow. They played "One Fine Day," also off of Everything—I need to go back and give that album another listen; I think it may have way more jams than I had realized.

Introducing the song "Help Me," off of the groundbreaking My Life in the Bush of Ghosts, Byrne noted that the album, "wasn't the most popular" when it came out, that while neither he nor Eno sang on the album, it wasn't an instrumental record. "We used what was then called 'found sounds,' what would go on to be called 'sampling,' although this was pre-samplers, and we had to do it all the hard way. There are no samplers here tonight; I'll be the sampler." And he went on to belt out the song in a perfectly possessed radio preacher voice. They played "Houses in Motion," Byrne and the dancers pulling off a neat bit of choreography in which, between the lines, one dancer would leap between Byrne and the mic just as the singer stepped barely out of the way; it was pretty cool looking. Later in that song, the dancers tried to incite some handclapping without much success, not that it diminished the male dancer's giant, top-of-the-world, open-mouthed smile.

I think they played "My Big Nurse" next, and then "My Big Hands (Fall Through the Cracks)," originally from the sountdrack to a Twyla Tharp dance piece, "The Catherine Wheel" (Byrne noted that Tharp's choreography for the song had been different than theirs and involved a French maid, the mention of which elicited big cheers to which Byrne demurred, "Well, okay.") They played the Talking Heads song "Heaven," and as singularly chilling and yet reassuring as that song is, I found myself thinking about how it stacked up, in terms of existential pondering and its attempt at visualizing non-existence/eternity, with the Built to Spill song "Randy Described Eternity" (I like both songs, for the record). They played "Air," the three dancers wielding unplugged electric guitars as props, starting and returning to a loose huddle with Byrne.

They played "Life is Long," Byrne and the kind of Miranda July-looking dancer sitting in office chairs while Byrne played guitar and sang, the other two dancers joining on their own office chairs as the song progressed, one of them (that enthusiastic dude) finally speeding across the stage on his at the song's end in what looked like a lot of fun. They played "Crosseyed and Painless" and "Born Under Punches."

I was expecting it and expecting it to be awesome, but I was still taken aback by "Once in a Lifetime"—god damn, that song is amazing, and that keyboard sound, all background and aqueous and yet still somehow dominating on the bridge—even as reproduced here, outside of the studio, it sounded just incredible. That male dancer was leapfrogging over his fellow dancers, then leapfrogging over Byrne. The whole crowd was on their feet and dancing, or (and I know Dave Segal touched on this in his review of Byrne's last show) kind of dancing. They played "Life During Wartime" ("this ain't no disco" etc). They finished the set with "Stuff."

They encored with "Take Me to the River" and "The Great Curve," and then Byrne said, "Wait, there's more," and introduced the Extra Action Marching Band from San Francisco. "Make room, they're coming in from the back." The band, decked out in gauzy, gaudy, and glittery white (and not much of it), proceeded onto the stage, horn players and percussionists led by flag waving go-go boys and pom-pom shaking evil cheerleaders (glad to see they're still getting work after that Nirvana video). They joined Byrne and his band for a mega-sized, martial version of "Road to Nowhere" and (duh) a totally, perfectly incendiary, building-collapsing version of "Burning Down the House" culminating with Byrne being all but engulfed by pom poms and a crush of people. Following one big bow, Byrne and his band returned for a second encore, a subdued, benedictory version of the song "Everything that Happens Will Happen Today." Safe to say everyone left feeling blessed.

New (Old) Against Me! - "Unsubstantiated Rumors"

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 1:39 PM

7c05/1245962344-originalcowcover.jpgOn July 7th Fat Wreck Chords will release The Original Cowboy, a collection of demos that Against Me! recorded in the summer of 2003 while preparing for As the Eternal Cowboy. The label just posted an MP3 from the album (which is available for pre-order).

Against Me! - "Unsubstantiated Rumors (Are Good Enough For Me To Base My Life On)"

The Original Cowboy's track list is:

1. A Brief Yet Triumphant Introduction / Cliché Guevarra
2. Mutiny on the Electronic Bay
3. T.S.R. (This Shit Rules)
4. Rice and Bread
5. Cavalier Eternal
6. Unsubstantiated Rumors (Are Good Enough For Me To Base My Life On)
7. Slurring the Rhythms
8. You Look Like I Need a Drink / Turn Those Clapping Hands Into Angry Balled Fists

A/D Converters: Mini-Me, Dither, Ram Bits

Posted by Trent Moorman on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 1:09 PM

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London Bridge Studio is a mecca. It is a bastion of gear head fantasy with its vintage Neve 8048 console and drum room of Bonham delight. Being a gear head in London Bridge Studio is like being a necrophiliac in a morgue. There’s too much to like.

On the other side the inputs and keyboards is an enmeshed intestinal world of circuits and wire. There the gear head feeds. Underneath knobs, faders, and screens lies a minute constellation of geekdom and know how. Ram, bits, and chains run. Can you feel it? The beauty. Electricity is the soundcard’s dreaming.

When working with computers and sound, signals are constantly being translated from analog to digital and back again. When the guitar player lays down their part, and you are editing it on a computer, you want the quality of sound to be the highest it can be. When you burn the song to disc, you want the disc to sound as good as can, right? Of course you do.

A/D converters do the translating. Different types of converters operate at different resolutions. That resolution determines the sound quality. Then there is the dithering. Dithering takes signal and allows the computer to understand it. Having good converters can make your home recording. Converters can provide the magic.

Like the stone mason knows stone, and the astronaut — space, the gear head knows gear. And revels in gear. Jonathan Plum from London Bridge Studio is one of those gear heads. He spoke and revealed knowledge:

What do the converters do?
Plum: People are often unaware of how important A/D converters are. Or even what they are. An A/D Converter converts an analog audio signal into a digital signal. Any digital recording device has one. It's as much as an important link in the signal chain as your microphone, preamp, and cables are.

Get techie with it.
Gear heads like us at London Bridge can endlessly debate on which A/D converters sound better. The cheaper the home recording gear is the cheaper the A/D converters are. Now-a-days most musicians own some form of ProTools or something similar. Usually it's the LE version. LE stands for Light Edition. It also stands for cheap and shitty sounding. When you’re paying $1000 for a Digi 002 that has 8 ins, 8 outs, 4 Focusrite mic pre's, and headphones etc. How good of quality do you actually expect the A/D converter to be?

I don’t know, tell me. And stay geeky.
Well, it's not great. It's the main reason why a Digi 002 can't sound as good as a ProTools HD system. At London Bridge we spent upwards of $12,000 on just our converters alone in the form of three Digidesign 192's. This gives us thirty-two quality digital ins and outs from ProTools to our Neve mixing board.

So how can home recorders improve?
There are many manufacturers of quality stand alone converters that can be used in conjunction with an LE system. Here at London Bridge we just upgraded our private studio suites into two identical public overdub suites. Both rooms feature a ProTools Digi 002 system running the brand new ProTools 8 software with Apogee MiniMe A/D converters. These converters are the perfect solution to making an LE system run like a pro system. They are a simple two channel A/D converter that feeds directly into ProTools digitally. All they do is convert the audio signal into a digital signal which then is fed into ProTools digital input. Fortunately, the cheap components of the LE system are thus bypassed. The MiniMe's are also capable of going hi res which simply means they can sample at higher resolutions than the cd standard format of 44.1 Khz. The MiniMe can go up to 96 Khz. With these 2 channel converters we can record at exactly the same quality as our main Neve room can. Only 2 channels at a time. Which is really all you need when overdubbing.

God that is sexy.
I know.

On Sonic Boom Leaving 15th Avenue

Posted by Grant Brissey on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 12:42 PM

Since I Live less than a block from the 15th Avenue Sonic Boom, I have mixed feelings upon learning that it's moving to a new location (on Melrose between Pike and Pine). On one hand, I'm obviously bummed that one of the best record stores in the city won't be within a stone's throw of my front door, but on the other hand, I'm relieved that one of the best record stores in the city won't be within a stone's throw of my front door. When I do have money (rare), it's all too tempting to part with it there, and when I don't have money (most of the time), it's fucking torture to walk past that place almost every night. In all seriousness though, Sonic Boom on 15th, you will be greatly missed, and good luck at the new location.

On a side note, I'm surprised to hear that Olympia Pizza and Spaghetti House III will be expanding into the space. I know the food is great, but it never seems busy enough to justify an expansion. My advice to owner Harry Nicoloudakis: Build it out as a low-key bar/lounge. There's definitely a niche to be filled in that neighborhood, because sometimes Hopvine Pub, Liberty, and The Canterbury just don't really fit the bill, and they're always fairly busy, if not packed.

HT: CapitolHillSeattle

Why Does Punk Rock Hate California?

Posted by Megan Seling on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 12:03 PM

Listening to Smoke and Fire's "California's Burning" (over and over and over again) got me thinking—there sure are a lot of punk and rock songs about wanting to destroy the Golden State. Sink it, burn it down, whatever. Punk rock hates California.

"Wake up, grab your bags. California's burning to the ground.... Burn it down! Burn it down!" - Smoke or Fire, "California's Burning"

"I wish California, without any warning, would go and start a burning tonight/I wish California would fall in the ocean and everyone would die." - Blatz, "California"

"California sucks, just look who you've produced/Ronald Reagan, Jerry Brown and countless other fools/West Coast sun-tanned morons, you don't know how to think/I can't wait 'til your state erodes and you fall into the drink." - Screeching Weasel, "California Sucks"

"So with no evacuation, let California fall into the fucking ocean!" - Rancid, "Antennas"

"I'm getting higher, I think I'll start a forest fire/There's a forest fire climbin the hill/Burning wealthy California homes/Better run run run run run run from the fire." - Dead Kennedys, "Forest Fire"

Perhaps the backlash is because everyone's sick and tired of hearing about how great California is?

"We’re all so sick of California songs/Yeah we know you love L.A./But there’s nothing left to say/Please no more California songs/And fuck New York too." - Local H, "California Songs"

What are some others? If we could get a half dozen or so more, this could make for a pretty great West Coast road trip mix...

RIP, Music Journalist Steven Wells

Posted by Dave Segal on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 11:16 AM

English-born music journalist Steven Wells died of cancer June 24; he was diagnosed with Hodgkin's lymphona in 2006. Philadelphia Weekly ran his last column, which has turned into a heartfelt commemoration to the man in the comments.

Love or hate Steven Wells (it was impossible to feel "meh" about his work), his writing projected a strong, gutsy voice that made up in bilious, spit-out-your-drink humor what it lacked in subtlety and, to my mind, good musical taste. Nevertheless, I used to obsessively read his copy in NME and other UK music rags in the '80s and '90s. I disagreed with nearly everything he said, but damn if I didn't read every bloody article with the "Swells" by-line attached to it. He was a rare, poison-penned shit-stirrer in a field dominated by bland lifers terrified of falling off promo lists.

Confidential to That One Jerk at Last Night's David Byrne Concert

Posted by Eric Grandy on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 9:54 AM

When you're at a rock concert with seating and the people in front of you stand up, you basically have three options:

1. Remain seated and quietly seethe because you can't see anything.

2. Remain seated and yell, like a dick, at the people in front of you to sit down, because they're ruining it for everybody, man!

3. Stand the fuck up and go on watching the show.

So, you know, when the people in front of me stood up, I weighed my options and decided to stand up as well (#3); I cannot believe you actually chose #2—don't you know there was like a whole SNL sketch about you?

A proper review of last night's otherwise totally amazing concert coming soon.

Re: More of Everything

Posted by Eric Grandy on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 9:07 AM

Just because, Brendan?

Just because...of this?

I only mention it because it brings me to a story: When I was a teenager, I bought and brought home a Gas Huffer t-shirt from one of the band's many, many shows at the Old Firehouse. The shirt depicted an ugly cartoon dude with x-ed out eyes slumped over the fumes emanating from a bottle of "rocket fuel." Seemed like a pretty literal, self-explanatory shirt to promote a band called Gas Huffer, right? Well, my mom didn't see it that way. My mom thought the shirt promoted drug use, specifically gas huffing. I think I argued at the time that Gas Huffer was just the name of the band, so mellow out, mom. If I'd been a little quicker on my feet as a teen, I might have argued that, look, obviously the band is having a laugh at gas huffing, ridiculing it—hell, the guy on the shirt has x-ed out eyes, he's dead; this is, if anything, an anti-gas huffing t-shirt.

Whatever arguments I made in the shirt's favor, my mom ultimately ruled against it, cutting it up with a pair of scissors and throwing it in the trash while I looked on, not even reimbursing me for the money (my own, earned from working part-time at any number of shitty after-school fast-food jobs) that I'd paid for it. This was at a time when my folks were waging an ultimately unwinnable war against my casual drug use, motivated no doubt by the usual parental fears that a little pot (or, I guess, gas) would keep me from amounting to anything (and, as ever with these generational conflicts, completely forgetting their own youthful dalliances). Point being, even if I had been huffing gas, I still could've grown up to become a successful writer for the Stranger. So there.*

*Although, I guess this still doesn't prove how much more either of us could've achieved (the New Yorker? we'll never know) if we hadn't been huffing gas or smoking pot...damn it.

Tonight in Music: Major Lazer, Here We Go Magic, Spaceman

Posted by Chris Govella on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 9:00 AM

Eric Grandy on Major Lazer:

Major Lazer ft. Diplo and Switch, DJ Ayres, Tigerbeat

(Neumos) Diplo and Switch are clearly no strangers to this music or its makers—they're professionals who make their living in record shops and recording studios—but it's safe to say they're counting on an audience whose knowledge of dub and dancehall might not necessarily extend any further than what they've sampled in their previous productions or occasionally mixed into their DJ sets. So Guns is more of a casual survey, a vacation to Jamaica, than it is an academic guided tour. This isn't a Soul Jazz anthology we're talking about here; it's a Saturday-morning cartoon. It's dancehall for dummies, but it's not (all) dumb.

Also in Up & Coming:

Here We Go Magic, Final Spins, Brittain Ashford

(Chop Suey) Lavishly praised by indie-pop icons like Ben Gibbard and Sufjan Stevens, and media institutions like Rolling Stone and the Onion, Here We Go Magic (Luke Temple) is gifted with an angelic voice that somehow doesn't cloy. Temple pens rich and strange songs of enchantment, seemingly out of an altruistic urge to bring more fragile beauty into the world. "Tunnelvision" represents the zenith of his artistry: a breezy slice of psychedelic folk seemingly woven out of Stevie Nicks's blouses and stardust, and powered by centaurs' hoofbeats. But HWGM is also capable of creating seriously eerie ambience that wouldn't sound out of place on a Kranky Records release. Here We Go Magic? Truth. DAVE SEGAL

Key Element, Neema, Mad Rad, Spaceman, DJ 100Proof

(Nectar) If Fatal Lucciauno represents the gangster side of his label, Sportn' Life, then Spaceman represents its pop side. (Or, better yet, what sounds like pop to my ears—it may sound like something else to other ears.) Spaceman, who has worked with Jake One and other notable beat-makers in town, is more in the stream of national hiphop trends. Though based in Seattle, he very well could be based in Atlanta or Chicago—and this is no bad thing. It shows that hiphop here is not limited to sad sounds, or to an obsession with rain, clouds, and gothic atmospheres, or to political and social realism. Spaceman could be the next big thing to come out of Seattle. He certainly has the commercial appeal that's needed to reach the stars. CHARLES MUDEDE See also My Philosophy.

Deer Tick, Dawes, Widower

(Tractor) Providence, Rhode Island, band Deer Tick play pretty traditional folk rock, marked by delicate, careful fingerpicked guitar and banjo, gentle walking bass lines, upbeat snare shuffling, and, most distinctively, singer-songwriter John Joseph McCauley III's simultaneously reedy and gutturally growling voice, which he plies in service of typically hard-luck lyrics. "Easy," the lead single from new album Born on Flag Day, finds the band sounding more electrified and amplified than on their previous War Elephant, but soon the album settles back down into calmer rootsy territory. If you don't dig McCauley's dingy singing style, these sparer arrangements, which throw his voice way out front, will irk, but some ears will enjoy the dissonance between the sweet background sounds and that worn-down whine. ERIC GRANDY

Remember to check our online music calendar for a complete listing of bands, DJs and live music.

Sir Richard Bishop Interview: Outtakes & Rare Besides

Posted by Dave Segal on Thu, Jun 25, 2009 at 5:53 AM

Due to space limitations inherent in The Stranger’s print version, some interesting exchanges didn’t make it into this week’s story on chameleonic guitar superhero Sir Richard Bishop. I’d like to include some of them here on the infinite planes of the internet. I hope you find them edifying.

You’re a voracious stylistic chameleon (I mean that in the nicest way possible); what triggered this sort of musical wanderlust? That being said, are there any genres/ethnic musics that you will never attempt? What styles do you plan to assay for the future, or do you not operate in that way?

I’ve just been exposed to a lot of cool sounds over the years (as well as many not-so-cool sounds), so it’s a matter of filtering out what I like and cursing what I don’t. It’s easy for me to grab hold of certain things if they affect me in a positive way, and re-interpret them into something a little bit different. There are plenty of genres or styles that I will never attempt simply because I don’t feel anything when I hear them, for example, anything with steel drums! There’s a lot of bad ‘world’ music out there, always has been. Seems like there is now a ‘one-world’ type of ethnic music that is being manufactured, world-fusion crap that is all watered down and safe for the masses and the idiotic populace will eat it up because it is non-threatening. People will buy this shit on CD when they buy their coffee. As for me, I don’t know what I will attempt next, but I’ll know it when I hear it.

Will this tour be mostly you and the band playing songs from The Freak of Araby or will be extemporizing and digging deeper into your catalog?

With the possible exception of one or two Middle Eastern songs from the Sun City Girls repertoire, this tour will feature all new material. We are doing most of the new record, plus several other Arabic classics that were never recorded; songs we learned during rehearsals for the tour.

Which song(s) is/are your favorite to cover, and why?

It used to be several Django Reinhardt pieces but right now I am enjoying all the traditional Middle Eastern songs that I’m doing for this tour. I plan on learning a lot more of these if for no other reason than that many are difficult to learn on guitar (kind of like the Django songs). So, each time I learn one of these pieces, and get the band to learn it, it’s quite a feeling of accomplishment. But I have to keep playing them or I will forget them all. That’s what happened with those Django songs. I can’t remember how to play them now because it’s been over a year since I tried to.

3aca/1245898954-music4_sirrichardbishop_marksullo-570.jpg

Do you plan to explore drone-based and noise music, as you did on While My Guitar Violently Bleeds and “Saraswati” from Polytheistic Fragments?

I think the drone side of things will always be present one way or another and that’s mainly because of my appreciation of Indian music. As for noise music, that’s a different beast altogether. I have some ideas that I am working on in relation to the whole noise thing but those aren’t ready for public consumption just yet, or rather the noise crowd isn’t ready for it yet because it will challenge their whole concept of it. I’ve seen and heard hundreds of noise bands over the years and to be honest, most of them are boring and entirely one-dimensional. That’s what I am trying to avoid.

How deeply are you involved with Sublime Frequencies these days? Are there any projects in the works?

Not so much these days. I’ve been too busy with other things over the last couple of years and since then the label has really taken off into the stratosphere. However, besides being probably the label’s biggest emotional supporter, I still hunt and gather as much music or film that I can muster during my travels and eventually some of this stuff may be released. The label is solely run by my brother [Alan] and Hisham Mayet, with a fair amount of help from Mark Gergis and Rob Millis. It’s in good hands and always has been.

Photo by Mark Sullo.

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